The cultural career of coolness : discourses and practices of affect control in European antiquity, the United States, and Japan
著者
書誌事項
The cultural career of coolness : discourses and practices of affect control in European antiquity, the United States, and Japan
Lexington Books, c2013
- : cloth
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注記
Other editors: Irmela Hijiya-Kirschnereit, Catrin Gersdorf, Elena Giannoulis
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Cool is a word of American English that has been integrated into the vocabulary of numerous languages around the globe. Today it is a term most often used in advertising trendy commodities, or, more generally, in promoting urban lifestyles in our postmodern age. But what is the history of the term "cool?" When has coolness come to be associated with certain modes of contemporary self-fashioning? On what grounds do certain nations claim a privilege to be recognized as "cool?" These are some of the questions that served as a starting-point for a comparative cultural inquiry which brought together specialists from American Studies and Japanese Studies, but also from Classics, Philosophy and Sociology. The conceptual grid of the volume can be described as follows:
(1) Coolness is a metaphorical term for affect-control. It is tied in with cultural discourses on the emotions and the norms of their public display, and with gendered cultural practices of subjectivity.
(2) In the course of the cultural transformations of modernity, the term acquired new importance as a concept referring to practices of individual, ethnic, and national difference.
(3) Depending on cultural context, coolness is defined in terms of aesthetic detachment and self-irony, of withdrawal, dissidence and even latent rebellion.
(4) Coolness often carries undertones of ambivalence. The situational adequacy of cool behavior becomes an issue for contending ethical and aesthetic discourses since an ethical ideal of self-control and a strategy of performing self-control are inextricably intertwined.
(5) In literature and film, coolness as a character trait is portrayed as a personal strength, as a lack of emotion, as an effect of trauma, as a mask for suffering or rage, as precious behavior, or as savvyness. This wide spectrum is significant: artistic productions offer valid insights into contradictions of cultural discourses on affect-control.
(6) American and Japanese cultural productions show that twentieth-century notions of coolness hybridize different cultural traditions of affect-control.
目次
Introduction, by Ulla Haselstein and Irmela Hijiya-Kischnereit
Part I: "Coolness" in Antiquity
Chapter 1: Emotionally challenged, wisely detached, or incredibly cool? On Stoic Apathy, by Catherine Newmark
Chapter 2: Roman Cool, by Daniel L. Selden
Part II: American Cool
Chapter 3: The Cultural Career of Coolness, by Ulla Haselstein
Chapter 4: Kinds of Cool: Emotions and the Rhetoric of Nineteenth-Century American Abolitionism, by Catrin Gersdorf
Chapter 5: The Mask of Cool in Postwar Jazz and Film Noir, by Joel Dinerstein
Chapter 6: Cool Revenge: Kill Bill and the Female Warrior, by Sophia Frese
Part III: Japanese Cool
Chapter 7: Is Japan Cool?, by Irmela Hijiya-Kischnereit
Chapter 8: "Hot" and "Cold" and "Cool": Toward a Climatology of Japanese Culture, by Jens Heise
Chapter 9: Cold Norms and Warm Hearts: On the Conception of Etiquette Rules in Advice Books from Early Modern and Modern Japan, by Michael Kinski
Chapter 10: Iki as a mode of Japanese coolness, by Elena Giannoulis
Chapter 11: The Domestication of the Cool Cat, by Paul Roquet
Chapter 12: Marketing National and Self Appearances: Cool and Cute in J-Culture, Aviad E. Raz
Part IV: Global Cool
Chapter 13: Cool Capitalism at Work, by Jim McGuigan
About the Authors
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